Sep. 4th, 2013

monk111: (Little Bear)
I missed another walk. Slept late. And right after I posted about being on the regular again. I would have gone out a little late this morning, but it is also Trash Day and I have to give twenty minutes to that. So it' a no-go. Too bad: I lose my quality time with Infinite Jest.

Why didn't you wake me up, Bo?
monk111: (Default)
Last night, Sugar had a good Twitter conversation about watching episodes of "Star Trek: The Next Generation". It got me thinking again about owning my own DVDs of the show. But it's a down-the-road idea, because although I am sitting on a little wad of cash, I have my heart set on getting the new GTA game and seeing if I have one more video-game hurrah left in me, and that little experiment is going to drain me of sixty dollars, which is a fortune in Monk terms. So, yeah, it may be a while, if it ever happens.
monk111: (Flight)
Coming across the Ellen and William Craft story in my reading about the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, I thought it would be a good idea to keep a note. Under the new law, private citizens and the federal authorities were required to assist in the capture of runaway slaves in the north.

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Ellen Craft (1826–1891) and William Craft (September 25, 1824 – January 29, 1900) were slaves from Macon, Georgia in the United States who escaped to the North in December 1848 by traveling openly by train and steamboat, arriving in Philadelphia on Christmas Day. She posed as a white male planter and he as her personal servant. Their daring escape was widely publicized, making them among the most famous of fugitive slaves. Abolitionists featured them in public lectures to gain support in the struggle to end the institution. As the light-skinned mixed-race daughter of a mulatto slave and her white master, Ellen Craft used her appearance to pass as a white man, dressed in appropriate clothing.

Threatened by slave catchers in Boston after passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, the Crafts escaped to England, where they lived for nearly two decades and reared five children. The Crafts lectured publicly about their escape. In 1860 they published a written account, Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom; Or, The Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery. One of the most compelling of the many slave narratives published before the American Civil War, their book reached wide audiences in Great Britain and the United States. After their return to the US in 1868, the Crafts opened an agricultural school for freedmen's children in Georgia and worked the farm until 1890. Their account was reprinted in the United States in 1999, with both the Crafts credited as authors, and it is available online at Project Gutenberg and the University of Virginia.

-- Wikipedia

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

After the Crafts escaped, Theodore Parker, the head of the church that the couple belonged to, sent President Fillmore a derisive note. Fillmore was aggressive about enforcing the new law and in trying to capture the Crafts. Parker wrote, "You cannot think that I am to stand by and see my own church carried off to slavery and do nothing to hinder such a wrong."

[Source: Sean Wilentz, "The Rise of American Democracy"]

Weather

Sep. 4th, 2013 03:31 pm
monk111: (Bonobo Thinking)
Very overcast this afternoon. Whoa, and now the sound of thunder! We need a good storm. I have all the cats inside. At this point, though, we are so desperate that we will gladly take a shower. Anything. Hell, it's nice just not to have the sun beating down on us. In fact, the temperature has dropped from 100 degrees to 93 already.

Weather

Sep. 4th, 2013 03:51 pm
monk111: (Primal Hunger)
Well, that was a nice five minutes. I wouldn't call it shower. More like an accidental drizzle. But I am not without hope that there is more to come, not that I would bet any money on it.

Weather

Sep. 4th, 2013 05:28 pm
monk111: (Cats)
The sky had cleared up so beautifully light blue that I guess that little sprinkle really is all that we are going to get, and I will be letting the cats out soon. Soooo dry.
monk111: (Default)
“In this character of the Americans a love of freedom is the predominating feature … This fierce spirit of liberty is stronger in the English colonies, probably, than in any other people of the earth.

[...]

“We cannot falsify the pedigree of this fierce people, and persuade them that they are not sprung from a nation in whose veins the blood of freedom circulates ... your speech would betray you. An Englishman is the unfittest person on Earth to argue another Englishman into slavery.”


-- Edmund Burke

This was from his “Speech on Moving his Resolutions for Conciliation with the Colonies”, delivered on March 22, 1775.

[Source: Jesse Norman, “Edmund Burke: The First Conservative”]
monk111: (Little Bear)
Looking up "Star Trek: The Next Generation" at Amazon, I discovered that I can watch all the episodes for free with Prime membership. Of course, since I don't know how to put our Internet on our television sets, I have to satisfy myself with watching the episodes on the computer screen, but you cannot beat the price.
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